Originally published Friday, February 25, 2005 at 12:00 AM
Researchers: Uganda's AIDS decline due to victims dying, not abstinence
Abstinence and sexual fidelity have played virtually no role in the much-heralded decline of AIDS rates in the most closely studied region...
The Washington Post
BOSTON — Abstinence and sexual fidelity have played virtually no role in the much-heralded decline of AIDS rates in the most closely studied region of Uganda, two researchers told a gathering of AIDS scientists.
Instead, the deaths of previously infected people, not dramatic change in human behavior, represent the main engine behind the ebbing of the overall rate, or prevalence, of AIDS in southern Uganda over the past decade, they reported.
The findings, not yet published, contradict earlier studies that attributed Uganda's success in AIDS prevention largely to campaigns promoting abstinence and faithfulness to sex partners. Much of the prevention work in the Bush administration's $15 billion global AIDS plan is built around those two themes, and Uganda frequently is cited as evidence that the strategy works.
If the Boston report stands up to scrutiny — and, more important, is borne out by surveys elsewhere in Uganda — it will deflate one of the few supposed triumphs to come out of AIDS-battered Africa in the past decade. The success of Uganda's ABC strategy — the letters stand for Abstinence/Be faithful/use Condoms — has been widely touted, and is on the verge of being exported to its neighbors with the help of U.S. money.
"There is an urgent need to assess abstinence and monogamy in other parts of Uganda," said Maria Wawer, a physician at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health who presented the data at the 12th Conference on Retroviruses, the annual midwinter AIDS meeting in the United States.
Ironically, she and her colleagues found that the one prevention technique whose use did increase between 1994 and 2003 was condoms — the part of the ABC triad that has been relatively de-emphasized in the Bush plan.
"Abstinence and monogamy are very good behaviors," she said in a press briefing after her presentation. "On the other hand, the data support that in this setting, the behavior that seems to have been the easiest to increase over time is condom use."
President Bush and administration officials repeatedly have cited Uganda's experience in promoting their approach. "We can learn from the experience of other countries when it comes to a good program to prevent the spread of AIDS, like the nation of Uganda," Bush said in June, adding that the ABC program is "a practical, balanced and moral message."
Wawer's findings come from a study of 10,000 people aged 15 to 49 who live in 44 villages near Uganda's border with Tanzania. Researchers each year have gone door to door collecting blood and urine samples and asking about health and behavior. About 85 percent of residents cooperate with the study, which has grown to include AIDS treatment and prevention services as well as research.
In the Rakai district, the percentage of women infected with HIV fell from 20 percent in 1994 to 13 percent in 2003. For men, that rate, or prevalence, of AIDS infection declined from 15 percent to 9 percent, roughly a decline of one-third.
Over that same period, however, the fraction of men reporting two or more sexual partners in the previous year increased from 28 percent to 35 percent. The fraction of young men aged 15 to 19 who were not sexually active fell from about 60 percent to less than 50 percent. For women that age, the proportion not having sex remained at about 30 percent through the decade.
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The median age of first intercourse for men fell from 17.1 to 16.2 years, and for women from 15.9 to 15.5 years, over the survey period.
Condom use, however, changed markedly. In 1994, only about 10 percent of men said they consistently used condoms with nonmarital partners, compared to 50 percent in 2003. For women of the same age, the rate of condom use in nonmarital sex increased from 2 percent to 28 percent.
Earlier data indicating that young Ugandans were delaying first intercourse came from surveys of primary-school students and national health studies in 1989, 1995 and 2000 that were conducted in different regions each time.
Because the Rakai survey has continued for years in the same place, it also provides an unusually precise measure of the rate of new infections, or incidence.
For women aged 15 to 24, incidence has increased slightly over the past decade, from slightly fewer than 1.5 new infections per 100 women per year to slightly more. For men, incidence increased from about 0.7 infections to 1 per 100 men per year.
That means Rakai's declining HIV prevalence is not due to a falloff in new infections. Instead, it appears to be explained by an increase in deaths. Between the 2002 and 2003 surveys, 125 people became newly infected, and 200 people with long-standing infections died.
Among Wawer's more troubling findings was that the percentage of men who had become infected in the previous year and also reported having two or more partners that year increased from about 48 percent to 68 percent. Newly infected people have unusually large amounts of AIDS virus in their blood and by some estimates are up to 10 times more likely to infect someone during intercourse.
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